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Actionable Media: Digital Communication Beyond the Desktop
Contributor(s): Tinnell, John (Author)

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ISBN: 0190678089     ISBN-13: 9780190678081
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
OUR PRICE: $34.19  

Binding Type: Paperback - See All Available Formats & Editions
Published: November 2017
Qty:
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Language Arts & Disciplines | Communication Studies
- Language Arts & Disciplines | Journalism
- Performing Arts | Film - History & Criticism
Dewey: 302.231
LCCN: 2017007885
Physical Information: 0.7" H x 6.1" W x 9.1" L (0.90 lbs) 278 pages
Features: Bibliography, Index
Review Citations: Choice 04/01/2018
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:
In 1991, Mark Weiser and his team at Xerox PARC declared they were reinventing computers for the twenty-first century. The computer would become integrated into the fabric of everyday life; it would shift to the background rather than being itself an object of focus. The resulting rise of
ubiquitous computing (smartphones, smartglasses, smart cities) have since thoroughly colonized our digital landscape. In Actionable Media, John Tinnell contends that there is an unsung rhetorical dimension to Weiser's legacy, which stretches far beyond recent iProducts. Taking up Weiser's motto,
Start from the arts and humanities, Tinnell develops a theoretical framework for understanding nascent initiatives--the Internet of things, wearable interfaces, augmented reality--in terms of their intellectual history, their relationship to earlier communication technologies, and their potential
to become vibrant platforms for public culture and critical media production.

It is clear that an ever-widening array of everyday spaces now double as venues for multimedia authorship. Writers, activists, and students, in cities and towns everywhere, are digitally augmenting physical environments. Audio walks embed narratives around local parks for pedestrians to encounter
during a stroll; online forums are woven into urban infrastructure and suburban plazas to invigorate community politics. This new wave of digital communication, which Tinnell terms actionable media, is presented through case studies of exemplar projects by leading artists, designers, and
research-creation teams. Chapters alter notions of ubiquitous computing through concepts drawn from Bernard Stiegler, Gregory Ulmer, and Hannah Arendt; from comparative media analyses with writing systems such as cuneiform, urban signage, and GUI software; and from relevant stylistic insights
gleaned from the open air arts practices of Augusto Boal, Claude Monet, and Janet Cardiff. Actionable Media challenges familiar claims about the combination of physical and digital spaces, beckoning contemporary media studies toward an alternative substrate of historical precursors, emerging forms,
design philosophies, and rhetorical principles.

 
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